Time to virological failure, defined as an increase in HIV RNA >50 copies in 2 determinations within 1 month. The first date with VL > 50 will be used to calculate time to virological failure. [ Time Frame: weeks 4, 12, 24, 36, 48. ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]

The purpose of this study is to determine the non-inferiority in the efficacy of DRV/r (900/100 mg) monotherapy at 48 weeks versus LPV/r (400/100 mg) as simplification strategy in subjects with sustained viral suppression on stable PI or NNRTI-antiretroviral regimens.

Detailed Description

The pillar of the current standard of care for highly active antiretroviral therapies (HAART) is the use of two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs).1 However, these agents can inhibit the mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma, causing mitochondrial dysfunction, which, in turn, may cause NRTI-related adverse events such as peripheral neuropathy, pancreatitis, liver disturbances, lipid profile abnormalities or lipoatrophy.2 As a result, strategies aimed to avoid the long term exposure to NRTIs and their toxicities are desirable for the management of HIV-infected patients.

Monotherapy with protease inhibitors (PIs) as a simplification approach therapy after an induction period with conventional antiretroviral treatment, appears to be of great utility for minimizing mitochondrial toxicity because of NRTIs. This approach may also increase patient adherence, reduce costs and preserve future treatment options. However, concerns remain regarding compartmental HIV replication due to limited drug penetration into the central nervous system, risk factors associated with monotherapy failure as well as the extrapolation of results obtained in clinical trial settings to routine clinical practice, are still not well known.

In this regard, there are reports that have suggested that lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) monotherapy may be an effective therapeutic option for treatment of HIV-1 infection in antiretroviral-naïve patients. 5,6 Moreover, some studies report that despite LPV/r allows CSF concentrations lower than plasma, its concentrations exceed levels that suppress wild-type HIV replication.7,8,9 However other authors have reported that LPV/r monotherapy results in suboptimal HIV suppression in the CSF compartment in approximately 10% of cases.10

Darunavir is the last PI with activity against wild-type and PI-resistant HIV. In ARTEMIS trial, DRV/r at doses of 800/100 mg once daily have demonstrated that it is non inferior and statistically superior than LPV/r and it is an effective treatment option for antiretroviral (ARV)-naïve patients. In this study, patients receiving once-daily DRV/r achieved high durable virologic response rates, which were comparable in patients with less favourable baseline characteristics or suboptimal adherence. In addition, they had a low discontinuation rate due to virologic failure or adverse events or both, did not develop protease inhibitor resistance upon failure, and had suitable drug exposure. 11,12

All these benefits, coupled with the higher genetic barrier, its favourable safety and plasmatic pharmacokinetic profile of DRV/r, suggest that DRV/r has the potential to be an excellent option for monotherapy simplification strategies.

Aside to the main goal of this project, the investigators are going to make use of the samples obtained from the CSF at 48 weeks of follow-up (as representative of the viruses replicating in the central nervous system) and genital tract and plasma at the different time points. The investigators will compare the sequence population of those organs from the different patients in order to state if viruses not found in plasma at one time point but found in reservoirs can be found in blood when the infection advance.

Absence of major PI-resistance mutations in HIV-protease (IAS 2008).20 Good treatment adherence.

Voluntary written informed consent.

Patients and physician's preference to change the current HAART regimen for reasons of simplification and/or toxicity.

Exclusion Criteria:

History of virological failure to a previous antiretroviral protease-containing regimens.

History of virological failure defined as two consecutive plasma HIV-1 RNA > 50 copies/mL while on current antiretroviral therapy

Acute infections or uncontrolled chronic infection in the 2 months previous to the inclusion or physical examination that, in the investigator's opinion, would compromise the patient's safety or outcome of the study

Breastfeeding, pregnancy or fertile women willing to be pregnant.

Patients co-infected with hepatitis B.

Concomitant use of any drug with potential drug-drug interaction with DRV/r or LPV/r at study entry.